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Baucon et al., 2012

A History of Ideas in Ichnology

Baucon, A., Bordy, E., Brustur, T., Buatois, L. A., Cunningham, T., De, C., Duffin, C., Felletti, F., Gaillard, C., Hu, B., Hu, L., Jensen, S., Knaust, D., Lockley, M., Lowe, P., Mayor, A., Mayoral, E., Mikuláš, R., Muttoni, G., Neto de Carvalho, C., Pemberton, S. G., Pollard, J., Rindsberg, A. K., Santos, A., Seike, K., Song, H., Turner, S., Uchman, A., Wang, Y., Yi-ming, G., Zhang, L., Zhang, W.
DOI
DOI10.1016/B978-0-444-53813-0.00001-0
Year2012
BookTrace Fossils as Indicators of Sedimentary Environments
Editor(s)Knaust, D., Bromley, R. G.
PublisherElsevier
Publisher placeAmsterdam
JournalDevelopments in Sedimentology
Belongs toKnaust & Bromley 2012 (eds)
Volume64
Pages3-43
Typechapter in book
LanguageEnglish
Id10718

Abstract

Although the concept of ichnology as a single coherent field arose in the nineteenth century, the endeavor of understanding traces is old as civilization and involved cultural areas worldwide. In fact, fossil and recent traces were recognized since prehistoric times and their study emerged from the European Renaissance. This progression, from empirical knowledge toward the modern concepts of ichnology, formed a major research field which developed on a global scale. This report outlines the history of ichnology by (1) exploring the individual cultural areas, (2) tracing a comprehensive bibliographic database, and (3) analyzing the evolution of ichnology semiquantitatively and in a graphical form (" tree of ichnology"). The results form a review and synthesis of the history of ichnology, establishing the individual and integrated importance of the different ichnological schools in the world.

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